Los Angeles Times

China eases rule for automakers

Tesla will be among beneficiar­ies of lifting of ownership limits.

- Bloomberg

China will let foreign automakers own more than 50% of local ventures, removing a two-decade restrictio­n and giving a boost to global companies seeking to capture a greater share of the world’s largest car market.

Electric-car makers such as Tesla Inc. will see the swiftest benefit, with ownership limitation for such businesses lifting as soon as this year. The cap for commercial vehicles will be eliminated in 2020 and for passenger vehicles in 2022, the agency that oversees industries said Tuesday.

The move may help diffuse tensions between China and the U.S. after President Trump’s intensifie­d rhetoric risked an all-out trade war. Companies including Daimler, BMW, General Motors Co. and Toyota Motor Corp. are set to find it easier to manufactur­e and do business in China, while local makers will be under increased pressure to speed up the building of their own brands.

China’s announceme­nt comes on the heels of a similar move for the financial industry last week.

“In a decade, foreign carmakers will gradually become all independen­t, and Chinese companies will lose the cash flows from the joint ventures,” said Yale Zhang, an analyst with Automotive Foresight Co. in Shanghai. “Foreign carmakers will be happy as they won’t have to share 50% of the profits with their Chinese partners.”

German and U.S. carmakers were quick to welcome the news, while assuring that they won’t abandon local partners.

Volkswagen said it will analyze whether China’s move leads to new options, saying its existing joint ventures won’t be affected. General Motors said that its growth in China is a result of working with its partners and that it would keep doing so. Tesla declined to comment.

Elon Musk-led Tesla in particular may benefit from the relaxed ownership rules.

Musk hasn’t been able to secure a deal to open an assembly plant in China, after negotiatin­g with Shanghai’s government for more than a year. The sides have disagreed on the ownership structure, people with knowledge of the situation said in February. The risk of higher import taxes spurred by Chinese trade friction with the U.S. may be allayed if Tesla clinches a local manufactur­ing agreement.

Those losing out include local new-energy vehicle makers such as BAIC Motor Corp. and BYD Co., with BYD in particular set to face tougher competitio­n from any lower-priced Teslas, said Dan Zhuang, an analyst at Rhb Osk Securities Hong Kong Ltd.

China has moved toward eliminatin­g the caps in recent years with promises of their eventual removal. It has required foreign automakers to enter into ventures with domestic partners to operate in the country since 1994, with the overseas company holding no more than 50%.

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